It's very possible. The behavior of a parent, plays a large part in custody cases. If one of the parents (or both) are considered unfit for whatever reason. It is highly unlikely they will be granted or retain custody of the child(ren). Either parent with an alcohol/drug problem would not be looked on favorably by a judge in a custody case. There would be strong potential for child endangerment and/or neglect.
The person taken into custody has been arrested
Driving while Black.
Given that you can be arrested, fined and/or jailed, yes, it is a criminal offence.
If you are evading arrest for a felony offense, when you are arrested your charge will be for whatever the original offense was.On the other hand, if you were in custody and then fled, you would be charged with the original crime PLUS the offense of being an escapee.
Yes, if police have taken someone into custody, they are in legal confinement between the point of arrest and the police station, where they will be booked for the offense for which they were arrested.
This depends on the state where the driving offense occured and what offense was commited. After your second driving offense of driving after revocation, you would most likely serve jail time.
The front driver can be arrested for driving without a license, since it is a federal offense.
Being arrested on capias means being taken into custody based on a court-issued warrant or order, often due to failure to appear in court or comply with court directives. It is separate from being arrested by law enforcement for a criminal offense.
If you have been arrested, there is no statute of limitations. You can't run, you have to deal with it.
He did wrong
"Illegal downloads" are a civil offense not a criminal offense. You cannot be arrested for committing a civil offense. However you can be brought to court and, if found guilty, fined heavily.
Insufficient information is given in the question. Was he arrested for the exact same OFFENSE for which he was convicted, or was he arrested on the same CHARGE for a totally different offense? If he was arrested for the EXACT SAME OFFENSE for which he was convicted he would be in the unconstitutional position of being placed in double jeapordy.